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The woman who backs the Taleban
The Scotsman ^ | October 12, 2001 | Paul Gallagher In Peshawar

Posted on 10/12/2001 8:30:00 AM PDT by vannrox

The woman who backs the Taleban

SHE is speaking up for a regime which would deny her a public voice. Rashida Zafar leads an all-female group which campaigns in favour of the Taleban - and its extraordinary restrictions on the lives of women.

The educated housewife believes that a Taleban-style regime should be introduced in her home country of Pakistan and says she is willing to fight to defend the Taleban in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Under Taleban rule, girls are refused the right to go to school and women are not allowed to go to work other than in health-care roles.

A woman found strolling in the company of a man who is not her relative can expect 100 lashes as a punishment, and the only public entertainment allowed is Friday afternoon executions, which take place in Kabul’s football stadium.

Criminals are shot or hanged and thieves’ hands are cut off. One woman had her thumb amputated for wearing nail varnish.

The Taleban also bans heeled shoes, neck-ties, playing chess, playing music, surfing the internet, having a "US or British hairstyle" and laughing when one is not meant to.

All females are ordered to observe the satar - the Islamic code for women requiring them to wear a traditional borqa, a head-to-toe dress which conceals every part of their body and has only a lace grille to allow them to see the outside world.

Those who do not comply face beatings in the street for showing as much as an ankle in public.

To Western eyes, it appears to be state-sponsored misogyny, but to Mrs Zafar, it is only under this strict Islamic law that women are truly free.

"We are happy to wear the borqa," she said. "The so-called freedom of women in the West is an illusion and is an insult to women.

"It is only under Islamic law, which has been given by God, that people are free."

Mrs Zafar is the leader of the women’s branch of Jamat-i-Islami Quazi Hussain Ahmed group in Pakistan’s north-west frontier province. The Islamic party is among the most active in organising protests against the government of the president, General Pervez Musharraf, and its policy of co-operating with the US and British air strikes on Afghanistan.

Its women’s branch organised a 70-strong demonstration in Peshawar yesterday, calling for an end to the suffering inflicted on innocent women and children by the conflict. The Peshawar protest was repeated across the powderkeg country yesterday, with troops in the Bajur area near the Afghan border opening fire on a crowd trying to storm a jail to free pro-Taleban activists. Eleven people were wounded, three critically.

Other Pakistani troops were deployed to patrol the streets in the troubled south-western city of Quetta on the eve of a general strike called by religious parties to protest against military strikes in Afghanistan.

The protesters in Peshawar were all dressed in borqas, their mouths covered as they shouted along to slogans led by a male party member.

Two sisters in white robes and head-dresses carried anti-American banners, accusing the US and its allies of bringing terrorism to the people of Afghanistan.

One said: "America wants to rule the world and impose its immoral values on everybody else. We are proud to be Muslims and will defend our faith against all attackers."

Her sister said women would take up the fight alongside their husbands and brothers if they were required.

"There is a lot we can do to help in the struggle, and we are prepared to do anything to defend the people of Afghanistan."

When the Taleban came to power in Afghanistan seven years ago, all female government workers were immediately ordered to leave their jobs. More than 7,500 women teachers were told they could not carry on their careers, despite the fact that the ban virtually crippled the country’s education system.

About 8,000 female undergraduates at Kabul University were told their lectures were over. Although Pakistan has no formal laws governing female dress and behaviour, it is rare to see women in public and rarer to hear them speaking out.

Under the Taleban - which takes its name from the Persian word for students - television is banned, as is listening to anything other than the Taleban’s own Shariat radio station, which broadcasts fanatical religious teachings.

Eight Christian aid workers are currently on trial in Kabul charged with propagating Christianity. If found guilty they could face the death sentence.

No women have been present at the angry protests held daily outside the mosque in Peshawar’s ancient bazaar since the attacks on Afghanistan began on Sunday night.

But the women at the protest yesterday said they would be happy to live under the further restrictions on their lives which would be imposed under a formal Islamic system of justice.

"The women of the West are only concerned with their rights and not at all concerned with their duties and responsibilities as wives and mothers," said another demonstrator.

"We want to live in a society where we are free to observe those duties."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events
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To: grellis
I think we're on the same page. Remember, I said way overstated.

I'm talking about the notion of freedom espoused by N.O.W., Planned Parenthood, et al. The sort of "freedom" that the left and hollywood sets up as a sort of role model for women. You're right. It's important to define "freedom". Freedom from, or to do, what?

21 posted on 10/12/2001 9:37:23 AM PDT by ecomcon
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To: grellis
When was it that women in western cultures stopped adhering to the unwritten "covered head" rule?

Honestly, I think it just went out of fashion. Men used to wear hats fairly frequently too.

22 posted on 10/12/2001 9:41:55 AM PDT by A Ruckus of Dogs
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To: vannrox
The wealthy Islamic women are just as in favor of oppression of the lower class women as their men are. They are ensured cheap servants and also woman can be worse tyrants than men.
23 posted on 10/12/2001 9:49:16 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: FITZ
I thought you were describing Hillary, Nancy Pelosi and Barbra Boxer - the UnHoly Trinity!

Pelosi's influence is insidious and more destructive than even Hillary ... she does her dirty work behind the scenes and uses mouthpieces...inpublic she is all for "women's issues"...

24 posted on 10/12/2001 9:57:25 AM PDT by BlessedByLiberty
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To: ecomcon
First off: I don't mean to "flame". I just want to clear up a couple of misconceptions in these quotes:

1. The "freedoms" that were yelled about (and thus finally granted) by groups such as N.O.W., Planned Parenthood and every other liberal organizations CLAIMING to represent the women of this Country have done more to harm REAL woman than anything ANY man could have conceived of. Now thanks to these idiotic groups, those of us who enjoy acting and being treated like ladies must hold down jobs, open our own doors, defend ourselves, etc. (you get the picture). Many, many of us would MUCH rather be at home raising our children and cooking dinner than dealing with guilt because we can't do it all. Of course, we have our government to thank for part of this problem. If my husband got to actually KEEP what he makes, I COULD stay home!

2. See # 1.

25 posted on 10/12/2001 10:19:04 AM PDT by KentuckyWoman
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To: vannrox

26 posted on 10/12/2001 10:23:50 AM PDT by Texaggie79
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To: vannrox
I think women stopped wearing real hats as Europe warmed up in the 16th century.
27 posted on 10/12/2001 10:33:51 AM PDT by TexanToTheCore
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To: vannrox
...girls are refused the right to go to school and women are not allowed to go to work other than in health-care roles.

...100 lashes as a punishment shot or hanged...hands are cut off...thumb amputated

...beatings in the street

It's for your own good, dear...

"The women of the West are only concerned with their rights and not at all concerned with their duties and responsibilities as wives and mothers," said another demonstrator."

And those responsibilities include raising girls to get shot or hanged, body parts cut off, and beatings in the streets? And your boys abandoned to the brainwashing of the Taliban because you don't want to, or are unable to care for them?

We want to live in a society where we are free to observe those duties.

Well, when you find it Rashida, you be sure to let all of us know.

28 posted on 10/12/2001 12:11:06 PM PDT by StealthChild
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To: vannrox
"We want to live in a society where we are free to observe those duties."

That gets my vote for the "war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength" thought of the week.

29 posted on 10/12/2001 12:42:04 PM PDT by jennyp
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